Researchers urge stronger protections like fishing limits and habitat conservation to prevent further decline in shark ...
Phys.org on MSN9d
Sharks Are Dying by the Millions: But Not the Way You ThinkData shows that while retention bans are a positive first step, they alone won’t be sufficient to stop the ongoing decline.
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Interesting Engineering on MSNSharks in peril: Industrial fishing pushes one-third of species toward extinctionHuman actions, such as incidental fishing and ineffective policies, push one-third of shark populations toward extinction.
A new study has revealed fascinating details about the Megalodon, the massive prehistoric shark that lived between 15 to 3.6 ...
The significant ecological imbalance in South Africa's False Bay is primarily due to the rapid collapse and absence of Great white sharks since 2015.
New research suggests that the prehistoric megalodon, the biggest shark known to have existed, was even larger than we ...
The now-extinct megalodon shark may have been larger than first believed, reaching lengths of 80 feet (24.3 meters), ...
A team of local fishermen made waves on Saturday when they reeled in a 12 to 13-foot great white shark from a Hatteras Island ...
Understanding hammerhead sharks’ food preferences could aid efforts to protect the critically endangered fish.
A thresher shark conservation effort in eastern Indonesia focusing on alternative sources of income has reduced up to 90% of ...
Retention Bans May Help Mar. 14, 2025 — Nearly one-third of sharks are threatened with extinction, mostly due to fishing. While mandated releases are helpful, researchers discovered that they ...
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